Leah Nanako Winkler

Last updated
Leah Nanako Winkler
Leah-Nanako-Winkler.jpg
Born
NationalityAmerican
Other namesウインクラーナナコ
Alma mater Brooklyn College
Occupation Playwright
Notable workKentucky, Two Mile Hollow, God Said This

Leah Nanako Winkler is a Japanese-born American playwright currently living in New York City. Her play God Said This won the 2018 Yale Drama Series Prize. Her play, Two Mile Hollow, recently won the Francesca Primus Prize. She is a recipient of a 2020 Steinberg Prize in Distinguished Playwrighting.

Contents

Early life

Winkler was born in Kamakura, Kanagawa, Japan to a Japanese mother and a Caucasian American father, [1] was a child model in Japan because of her Western looks and she modeled for a clothing magazine called Samantha. [2] [3] She came to the United States while still only a child and spoke primarily only Japanese. She learned English, but continued to study Japanese in a Japanese school. She grew up in Lexington, Kentucky and she credits her high school drama teacher at Tates Creek High School for introducing her to theatre. [4] Winkler moved to New York in 2006 to become a writer with the money she earned donating eggs to a fertility clinic. She worked many odd jobs to support herself and her theater career including working overnights at a 24-hour Starbucks. She received an MFA from Brooklyn College in 2018.

Career

Once in New York, Winkler formed her own theatre company called Everywhere Theatre Group. ETG produced Leah's plays as well as collaboratively written plays including Big Girls Club (2007), Dead People (2008 with Theodore Nicholas), Formula Play (2009), A Pale Horse Death Followed With: A Life Time Original Series (2008 with Theodore Nicholas) at downtown venues including The Brick, Dixon Place and the Ontological Hysteric Theater. In 2010 ETG's play The Internet (Incubator Arts Project) garnered favorable reviews in the New York Times. In 2011 Flying Snakes in 3D!!, [5] a science fiction parody meta-play. Leah was subsequently invited to present a manifesto regarding these issues at the Prelude Festival in 2012 alongside Richard Foreman and Mac Wellman. Shortly after ETG imploded. Leah continued to self-produce her short-form experimental work often at bars alongside poets and musicians. In 2013 Winkler published Nagoriyuki And Other Short Plays: Performed in NYC between 2008-2013. [6] In 2014, she had two plays Death for Sydney Black and Diversity Awareness Picnic on The Kilroys' List, a gender parity initiative highlighting underproduced works by female playwrights. In August 2014, Leah's play Taisetsu Na Hito was selected from an initial pool of 1,385 submissions to be performed at Sam French's Offf Off Broadway Festival Plays, 39th series [7] It was published later that year.

In 2015, Winkler published another book of plays, The Lowest Form of Writing [8] Her play Double Suicide At Ueno Park was produced by Ensemble Studio Theater. Her blog post about a yellowface production of The Mikado started a protest and led to further controversy.

In 2016, Winkler's play Kentucky was on the Kilroys list and had its world premiere at the Ensemble Studio Theatre as a co-production with the Radio Drama Network and Page 73 Productions in New York. The play garnered favorable reviews and the Times called her a "Distinctive New Voice"

The West Coast premiere was at East West Players in Los Angeles in the fall. [9]

In spring 2017, she was selected by the Sundance institute as a Sundance/Ucross Fellow. [10] Winkler was then named the 2017-2019 Jerome New York Fellow at the Lark. [11] [12] after being awarded the first-ever Mark O'Donnell Prize from the Actors Fund and Playwrights Horizons. [13] She also became one of Audible's first ever recipients of the Emerging Playwrights Fund to write an audio play. Leah's play Two Mile Hollow had a rolling premiere at four theaters across the U.S., The First Floor Theater (Chicago), Mixed Blood Theatre/Theater Mu (Minneapolis), Ferocious Lotus (San Francisco), and Artists at Play (Los Angeles) to critical acclaim. In 2018, her playGod Said This was selected for the 42nd Humana Festival of New American Plays, in Louisville, Kentucky in February–April 2018. [14] In March, 2018, God Said This was selected by Pulitzer Prize winning Ayad Akhtar from over 1600 plays from 50 countries to win the Yale Drama Series Prize. It premiered Off-Broadway in 2019 at Primary Stages. Also in 2019 she premiered her play Hot Asian Doctor Husband at Theater Mu and Mixed Blood and an audio play, Nevada-Tan exclusively on Audible.

Winkler is an alumna of the Youngblood group at the Ensemble Studio Theatre, Dorothy Strelsin New American Playwrights Group at Primary Stages, WP Lab and a current member of Ma-Yi Writers Lab. 

Selected plays

Awards

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marsha Norman</span> American writer

Marsha Norman is an American playwright, screenwriter, and novelist. She received the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for her play 'night, Mother. She wrote the book and lyrics for such Broadway musicals as The Secret Garden, for which she won a Tony Award and the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Book of a Musical, and The Red Shoes, as well as the libretto for the musical The Color Purple and the book for the musical The Bridges of Madison County. She was co-chair of the playwriting department at The Juilliard School until stepping down in 2020.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sheila Callaghan</span> American dramatist

Sheila Callaghan is a playwright and screenwriter who emerged from the RAT movement of the 1990s. She has been profiled by American Theater Magazine, "The Brooklyn Rail", Theatermania, and The Village Voice. Her work has been published in American Theatre magazine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Gallagher</span> American writer

Mary Gallagher is an American playwright, screenwriter, novelist, actress, director and teacher. For six years, she was artistic director of Gypsy, a theatre company in the Hudson Valley, New York, which collaborated with many artists to create site-specific mask-and-puppet music-theatre with texts and lyrics by Gallagher. These pieces included Premanjali and the 7 Geese Brothers, Ama and The Scottish Play. In 1996-97, she directed the Playwrights Workshop at the University of Iowa, and she taught playwriting and screenwriting at New York University/Tisch School of the Arts from 2001 to 2010. She is a member of Actors & Writers, a theater company in the Hudson Valley, and the Ensemble Studio Theater in New York City. She is an alumna of New Dramatists, where she developed many of her plays and created and moderated the series, "You Can Make a Life: Conversations with Playwrights" from 1994 to 2001.

Theater Mu,, located in Saint Paul, Minnesota, is an Asian American arts organization in the Midwest, the second largest in the country. According to Mu's website, the company name "Mu" is "the Korean pronunciation of the Chinese character Mu for the shaman-artist-warrior who connects the heavens and the earth through the tree of life."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ensemble Studio Theatre</span>

The Ensemble Studio Theatre (EST) is a non-profit membership-based developmental theatre located in Hell's Kitchen, New York City. It has a dual mission of nurturing individual theatre artists and developing new American plays.

Melanie Marnich is an American television writer-producer and playwright. She co-created and serves as executive producer and co-showrunner for the upcoming Amazon series, The Expatriates. She has written for Big Love on HBO; Her episode, “Come, Ye Saints” for Big Love, earned her a Writers Guild of America Award nomination for best drama episode. It was also named Best Television Episode of 2009 by Entertainment Weekly, rated third in TIME Magazine's list of 10 Best TV episodes of 2009, and ranked in TV Guide's 100 Best Episodes of All Time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ako (actress)</span> Japanese actress

Ako, or Ako Dachs, is a Japanese actress who is the founding Artistic Director of the Amaterasu Za theatre company. She received a Lucille Lortel Award nomination for Outstanding Lead Actress in 2019.

Jordan Harrison is an American playwright. He grew up on Bainbridge Island, Washington. His play Marjorie Prime was a finalist for the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

Sheri Wilner is an American playwright.

Jennifer Haley is an American playwright. She grew up in San Antonio, Texas and studied acting at the University of Texas at Austin for her undergraduate degree. Haley also received a MFA in playwriting at Brown University in 2005, where she worked under American playwright and professor, Paula Vogel. Now living in Los Angeles, Haley is pursuing a career in theatre, film and television.

The Kilroys' List is a gender parity initiative to end the "systematic underrepresentation of female and trans playwrights" in the American theater industry. Gender disparity is defined as the gap of unproduced playwrights' whose plays are being discriminated against based on the writer's gender identification and intersectional identities of race, sexual orientation, ethnicity, socioeconomic class, age, and ability. Recent statistical research released in November 2015, entitled The Count, gathered that 22% of total surveyed professional productions from 2011-2013 annual seasons were written by women playwrights, 3.8% of the total were written by women playwrights of color, and 0.4% of the total were written by foreign women playwrights of color. 78% of total surveyed professional productions were written by men playwrights.

Hilary Bettis is a playwright, a producer, and a writer.

Laura Jacqmin is a Los Angeles–based television writer, playwright, and video game writer from Shaker Heights, Ohio. She was the winner of the 2008 Wasserstein Prize, a $25,000 award given to recognize an emerging female playwright.

Lauren Yee is an American playwright.

Clare Barron is a playwright and actor from Wenatchee, Washington. She won the 2015 Obie Award for Playwriting for You Got Older. She was a finalist for the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for Dance Nation.

Antoinette Nwandu is an American playwright based in New York.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jocelyn Bioh</span> American dramatist

Jocelyn Bioh is a Ghanaian-American writer, playwright and actor. She graduated from Ohio State University with a BA in English and got her master's degree in Playwriting from Columbia University. Jocelyn's Broadway credits include The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. She has performed in regional and off-Broadway productions of An Octoroon, Bootycandy and For Colored Girls. She has written many of her own plays that have been produced in national and collegiate theaters. Some of her more well-known works include Nollywood Dreams and School Girls; Or, the African Mean Girls Play. Bioh is a playwright with Manhattan Theatre Club (MTC) and Atlantic Theater Company, is a resident playwright at Lincoln Center and is a 2017-18 Tow Playwright-in-Residence with MCC. She is a writer on the Hulu show Tiny Beautiful Things.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martyna Majok</span> Polish-American playwright (born 1985)

Martyna Majok is a Polish-born American playwright who received the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for her play Cost of Living. She emigrated to the United States as a child and grew up in New Jersey. Majok studied playwriting at the Yale School of Drama and Juilliard School. Her plays are often politically engaged, feature dark humor, and experiment with structure and time.

Susan Soon He Stanton is an American playwright, television writer, and screenwriter. Stanton was a producer and writer for HBO's Succession, for which she won Emmy, WGA, and Peabody Awards. She has also written for The Baby, Modern Love, Dead Ringers, and Conversation with Friends.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gab Reisman</span> American playwright

Gab Reisman is an American playwright, director, and immersive theatre maker. Her plays examine issues of cultural geography and identity, often incorporating humor and elements of the surreal.

References

  1. "Quarter Life Identity Crisis".
  2. "Conversation with Leah Nanako Winkler". 8 June 2016.
  3. "A Young Playwright's Quest to Ask Difficult Questions About Race, Class, and Gender". Los Angeles Times . 2 December 2016.
  4. "Kentucky Playwright Leah Nanako Winkler Now in New York, Enjoying Success on the Theater Scene". 28 December 2017.
  5. "Flying Snakes in 3D!!".
  6. Nagoriyuki on Amazon. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. 2 August 2013. ISBN   978-1-4903-6637-1.
  7. "Off Off Broadway Festival Plays, 39th Series".
  8. Lowest Form of Writing on Amazon. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. 20 March 2015. ISBN   978-1-5088-4611-6.
  9. "Kentucky at East West Players".
  10. "Ucross 2014 Residents".
  11. "Jerome New York Fellowship".
  12. "Leah Nanako Winkler Receives 2017-19 Jerome Fellowship". 12 December 2017.
  13. "Leah Nanako Winkler Awarded First-Ever Mark O'Donnell Prize".
  14. "42nd Humana Festival of New American Plays".
  15. "The Adventures of Minami: The Robot From Japan Who Makes You Feel Safe When Loneliness is Palpable".